Official NHSSC Softball Rules
Section Zero – ASA
- Except where otherwise specified in these rules, the NHSSC shall use the most recent edition of the ASA (Amateur Softball Association) rules for co-ed slow-pitch play.
Section One – Team
- Teams must consist of a minimum of
fourteen (14) players, with at least five (5) of each gender.
There is no maximum number of players a team may have
on its roster.
- Teams fielding with 10 players must field at least 3 players of each gender. Teams with only 2 players of given gender must field with no more field with 9; with 1 player of a given gender, no more than 8. A team with no player of one gender shall field no more than 7. Fewer than 7 is a forfeit.
- A catcher and pitcher are required positions.
- Game substitutes are strictly prohibited. Teams found to be playing with a non-roster player will forfeit the game.
Section Two – Field and
Equipment
- All necessary equipment will be
provided by the NHSSC, with the exception of fielder’s gloves.
Provided equipment includes bases, bats, balls, strike
plate, batting helmets, and catcher’s helmets.
- Players may bring their own all-aluminum or all-steel single-wall bats, provided that the bat in question is marked with the ASA logo. Double-wall or multi-wall, composite, wood, baseball, multi-piece
and fungo bats, are explicitly forbidden. The captain of an opposing team may challenge the legality of a bat after the batter steps to the plate but prior to the batter reaching base, and ask that the bat in question be compared to the NHSSC's list of ASA-approved single-wall bats. If the bat does not appear on the list in question, and does not indicate that it is an all-steel or all-aluminum single-wall bat, the bat shall not be used and the team possessing the bat shall lose one point in the standings.
- All games will be played with
NHSSC-provided regulation softballs. In social leagues, pitchers shall utilize a twelve-inch "Incrediball" for male batters and an eleven-inch softball for female batters. In semi-competitive leagues, pitchers shall utilize a twelve-inch softball for male batters and an eleven-inch softball for female batters.
- Foul lines shall be marked with
cones to assist umpires with determining fair and foul balls.
- A runner’s safety base
shall be used at first base.
- Any ground rules regarding
obstacles or
out-of-play areas may be decided upon by the umpire prior to the game,
and communicated to the respective team captains.
- Closed-toed shoes are required.
Metal cleats or spikes are not allowed.
Section Three – Game
Times
- Scheduled game times are forfeit
times, and the game clock shall be started at scheduled game times, regardless of any delays.
- The game will consist of 7 innings,
or 6.5 innings if the home team is leading. However, no
inning may start after 55 minutes have elapsed, unless the score is
tied.
- In the event of a tie, the game
may proceed until
either a team is leading at the conclusion of a full inning or 65 minutes
has elapsed since the game began. At the 65-minute mark the game must
stop, regardless of the situation on the field, with the score at the end of the last full inning being the official score.
Section Four – Fielding
- Each team may field up to ten players, no more of seven of
whom may be of any one gender. A team with only two of a gender may play only nine fielders. A team with only one of a gender may play only eight fielders. A team with no players of a gender shall field no more than seven players.
- Players may change field positions at any time.
- Any active roster player may substitute for any fielder at
any time.
- No fielder may obstruct a runner from advancing the bases.
If called, the umpire will award the runner a number
of bases necessary to nullify the obstruction.
- Infield fly rule: If
there are fewer than two outs
and runners are on first and second, and the batter pops up the ball to
the infield, the umpire shall shout “Infield fly!”
If the ball drops in fair territory to the infield,
the batter shall be called out. If
the ball drops in foul territory and is not caught, then it is
considered a foul ball. This rule
is intended to prevent intentional fielding errors to force runners
into a double play.
Section Five – Batting
- Each team shall provide their opponents with their batting order prior to the start of the game.
- Each team will have three outs in their half of the inning.
- A player will be considered out if he has three strikes, if
he hits
a ball that is caught on the fly in either fair or foul territory, or
if he invokes the infield fly rule.
- Four balls will result in a walk being awarded to the
batter.
- All batters will begin with a count of one ball and one
strike.
- Three consecutive fouls on a two-strike count will be
called an out.
- All team members present may be placed in the batting
order, but the batting order must remain the same throughout the game.
- Any late-arriving player may bat at the bottom of the
order, until the entire lineup has batted.
- No more than three players of the same gender may be listed in the batting order consecutively, unless the batting team takes an out for the missing player.
- If a player bats out of order and the error is caught by the opposing team while still at bat, the correct batter will take the original
player’s place at bat and resume the current count.
If the incorrect batter reaches base and the error is
caught by the opposing team the batter will be called out.
However, the opposing team must alert the umpire to
the error before the first pitch is thrown to the next batter.
- If a catcher interferes with a batter’s swing the
batter is automatically awarded first base.
- Home plate, bases, and foul lines are all to be considered
fair territory. Balls
that land between the foul lines and then leave fair territory prior to
first or third base will be considered foul, unless the ball is touched
by a fielder while the ball is in fair territory.
Balls
that land in fair territory past first and third base will be
considered fair, regardless of whether the ball rolls into foul
territory.
- Pinch batters are allowed in case of injury.
However,
the injured batter may not return to the game and the pinch batter will
permanently take the batter’s place in the batting
order.
If no substitutes are available, the injured batter shall be called out.
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Section Six – Running
- Runs are scored by advancing
through the bases in order.
- A runner will be called out if he
interferes with
a ball in play unless said ball is first touched by a fielder or the
runner is on base, if he is forced to a base that is tagged by a
fielder, if he is tagged directly by a fielder, if he leaves a base
before a pitch crosses home plate, if he passes a runner who precedes
him in the batting order, or if he leaves the basepaths to avoid being
tagged.
- Runners must give themselves up if
necessary to avoid collisions with fielders. Intentional
collisions will result in ejection from the game.
- Stealing is not allowed.
- Runners advancing to first base
must use the right “runner’s base,” while
fielders may use the white base. In
the event of a ball hit to the outfield, and the runner intends to
advance to second, he may round the base using the white base.
- A runner may overrun first base
without penalty. However, the
runner may be tagged out in the event of an aggressive move towards
second base.
- In the event of two runners
finding themselves at the same base, the runner who touches it first is
entitled to it. The other runner is
automatically out.
- Runners may not slide headfirst
while advancing a base. However, a
slide back towards an overrun base is allowed.
- Mercy Rule: A team
leading the game by 14 runs or more at any time shall be restricted from scoring more than seven runs per inning. Should a team be leading by more than 15 runs after 4.5 innings of play, or 12 runs after 5.5 innings of play, the inning then in progress shall be the last.
- Each team may, without objection from the opposing team, utilize no more than one courtesy runner per inning. A courtesy runner is only allowed when the batter has stopped on first base, and only the last batter out from the previous inning may serve as a courtesy runner. Courtesy runners still occupy their spot in the lineup, and do not take the place of the batter for any purpose other than running the bases. The invocation of the courtesy runner rule must be announced to the umpire and the opposing team captain before the courtesy runner relieves the batter of his position on base. If the opposing team objects to the courtesy runner, the original batter must remain on base. Except for this provision, pinch runners are only allowed in case
of injury. However,
the injured runner may not return to the game and the substitute batter
shall take the runner’s place in the batting order.
If no substitute is available, the injured runner
shall be called out.
- The NHSSC will utilize a commit line halfway between third base and home plate, and a scoring line that runs
perpendicular to home plate. If a player crosses the commit line, it
becomes a force play at home; if the catcher touches home plate with the
ball in his/her glove before the player crosses the scoring line, the
base runner is ruled out. Baserunners who touch home plate will be called out; to score the baserunner simply must cross the scoring line that runs perpendicular to home plate
Section Seven – Pitching
- A legal pitch is delivered to the
plate with at least one foot on the rubber, no less
than 35 feet from plate, using an underhand motion.
The pitch must arc to at least six feet in height
but no higher than 10 feet, as judged by the umpire, and
must strike the “strike plate” provided by the
NHSSC.
- Any pitch that does not fit this
description and is not hit by the batter shall be called a ball.
- A ball that slips out of the
pitcher’s hand during the wind-up is a
“no-pitch,” and the runners may not advance.
- Any pitch swung on and missed is
considered a strike.
- The pitcher may not advance
towards home plate until the ball is struck.
Section Eight – Scoring
- The winning team will be credited with two points towards
the standings.
- The score remains tied then each team will be credited with
one point towards the standings.
Section Nine – Umpires
- The judgment of the officials shall be final and binding.
- The official
shall be responsible for:
- Keeping time
- Calling every pitch,
hit, and play
- Recording each
strike, ball, out, and run
- Enforcing all NHSSC
policies
- No player shall
argue with NHSSC staff
- No
player shall use abusive language
- No
player shall engage in unsportsmanlike conduct
- Any player who
violates these rules twice
in the same game shall be ejected. Any player ejected from two games
shall be removed from the league. The NHSSC official on site may, at
his or her discretion, recommend further disciplinary action up to and
including a permanent ban from all NHSSC activities. Any player who
engages in any sort of violence, including fighting, shall be banned
permanently from the NHSSC.